Car Prices Are Falling – Auto Industry Review

Please choose any of the following articles below that interest you. Each article is listed under the month it was written. Articles written in prior months may still have educational interest.

Years of consecutive increases in U.S. auto sales have put a glut of vehicles on U.S. highways. In addition, a significant number of those sales were with a lease, leading to a rising tide of cars flowing back into the market as lease terms expired.

As automakers have added manufacturing capacity, they have also been aggressive in offering larger incentives on new vehicles in order to maintain record sales momentum. That has put downward pressure on the entire market.

Consequently, the number of drivers that owe more on their cars than they are worth is surging. Americans are paying on a record $1.6 trillion of auto loans currently, according to the most recent Federal Reserve data. That represents roughly half of all licensed drivers in the U.S. Among those that carry loan balances, the Federal Reserve estimates that auto loans make up between 10 percent and 23 percent of their total financial obligations.

Auto prices soared as the pandemic took hold in 2020 through 2022, as supply constraints for critical auto components hindered manufacturing and distribution of automobiles globally. Low interest rates on auto loans helped subsidize rising auto prices as consumer demand continued on.

Sources: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Print Version: Car Prices Falling Feb 2024

PlanRock offers investment due diligence services for Investment professionals. PlanRock offers Exchange Traded Funds on the New York Stock Exchange. See prospectus for more details. Please contact 800-677-6025 or go to www.PlanRock.com for more information about how we can help you reach your goals.
© PlanRock Investments, LLC. The content above is available for use only by authorized subscribers, clients and where permissible as such. This content is not authorized for resale. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The sources we use are believed to be reliable, but their accuracy is not guaranteed.